Windows stores thumbnails of graphics files, and certain document and movie files, in the Thumbnail Cache file, including the following formats:
JPEG,
BMP,
GIF,
PNG,
TIFF,
AVI,
PDF,
PPTX,
DOCX,
HTML, and many others. Its purpose is to prevent intensive disk
I/O, CPU processing, and load times when a folder that contains a large number of files is set to display each file as a thumbnail. This effect is more clearly seen when accessing a DVD containing thousands of photos without the thumbs.db file and setting the view to show thumbnails next to the filenames. Thumbnail caching was introduced in Windows 2000; wherein the thumbnails were stored in the image file's
alternate data stream if the operating system was installed on a drive with the
NTFS file system. A separate Thumbs.db file was created if Windows 2000 was installed on a FAT32 volume.
Windows Me also created Thumbs.db files. From Windows XP, thumbnail caching, and thus creation of Thumbs.db, can optionally be turned off. In Windows XP only, from Windows Explorer Tools Menu,
Folder Options, by checking "Do not cache thumbnails" on the
View tab. In other versions of Windows, thumbnail caching can be turned off via
Group Policy. Under Windows 2000, Windows Me, and Windows XP, a context menu command to force refreshing the thumbnail is available by right clicking the image in
Thumbnail view of Windows Explorer. ==Thumbs.db==